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Jeremiah 3:16

Context
3:16 In those days, your population will greatly increase 1  in the land. At that time,” says the Lord, “people will no longer talk about having the ark 2  that contains the Lord’s covenant with us. 3  They will not call it to mind, remember it, or miss it. No, that will not be done any more! 4 

Jeremiah 11:8

Context
11:8 But they did not listen to me or pay any attention to me! Each one of them followed the stubborn inclinations of his own wicked heart. So I brought on them all the punishments threatened in the covenant because they did not carry out its terms as I commanded them to do.’” 5 

Jeremiah 11:10

Context
11:10 They have gone back to the evil ways 6  of their ancestors of old who refused to obey what I told them. They, too, have paid allegiance to 7  other gods and worshiped them. Both the nation of Israel and the nation of Judah 8  have violated the covenant I made with their ancestors.

Jeremiah 31:33

Context
31:33 “But I will make a new covenant with the whole nation of Israel 9  after I plant them back in the land,” 10  says the Lord. 11  “I will 12  put my law within them 13  and write it on their hearts and minds. 14  I will be their God and they will be my people. 15 

Jeremiah 34:15

Context
34:15 Recently, however, you yourselves 16  showed a change of heart and did what is pleasing to me. You granted your fellow countrymen their freedom and you made a covenant to that effect in my presence in the house that I have claimed for my own. 17 

1 tn Heb “you will become numerous and fruitful.”

2 tn Or “chest.”

3 tn Heb “the ark of the covenant.” It is called this because it contained the tables of the law which in abbreviated form constituted their covenant obligations to the Lord, cf. Exod 31:18; 32:15; 34:29.

4 tn Or “Nor will another one be made”; Heb “one will not do/make [it?] again.”

5 tn Heb “So I brought on them all the terms of this covenant which I commanded to do and they did not do.” There is an interesting polarity that is being exploited by two different nuances implicit in the use of the word “terms” (דִּבְרֵי [divre], literally “words”), i.e., what the Lord “brings on” them, namely, the curses that are the penalty for disobedience and the stipulations that they are “to do,” that is, to carry out. The sentence is broken up this way in keeping with contemporary English style to avoid the long and complicated style of the original.

6 tn Or “They have repeated the evil actions of….”

7 tn Heb “have walked/followed after.” See the translator’s note at 2:5 for the idiom.

8 tn Heb “house of Israel and house of Judah.”

9 tn Heb “with the house of Israel.” All commentators agree that the term here refers to both the whole nation which was divided into the house of Israel and the house of Judah in v. 30.

10 tn Heb “after those days.” Commentators are generally agreed that this refers to the return from exile and the repopulation of the land referred to in vv. 27-28 and not to something subsequent to the time mentioned in v. 30. This is the sequencing that is also presupposed in other new covenant passages such as Deut 30:1-6; Ezek 11:17-20; 36:24-28.

11 tn Heb “Oracle of the Lord.”

12 tn Heb “‘But this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after these days:’ says the Lord, ‘I will….’” The sentence has been reworded and restructured to avoid the awkwardness of the original style.

13 tn Heb “in their inward parts.” The Hebrew word here refers to the seat of the thoughts, emotions, and decisions (Jer 9:8 [9:7 HT]). It is essentially synonymous with “heart” in Hebrew psychological terms.

14 tn The words “and minds” is not in the text but is supplied in the translation to bring the English psychology more into line with the Hebrew where the “heart” is the center both of knowing/thinking/reflecting and deciding/willing.

sn Two contexts are relevant for understanding this statement. First is the context of the first or old covenant which was characterized by a law written on stone tablets (e.g., Exod 32:15-16; 34:1, 28; Deut 4:13; 5:22; 9:10) or in a “book” or “scroll” (Deut 31:9-13) which could be lost (cf. 2 Kgs 22:8), forgotten (Hos 4:6), ignored (Jer 6:19; Amos 4:2), or altered (Jer 8:8). Second is the context of the repeated fault that Jeremiah has found with their stubborn (3:17; 7:24; 9:14; 11:8; 13:10; 16:12; 18:12; 23:17), uncircumcised (4:4; 9:26), and desperately wicked hearts (4:4; 17:9). Radical changes were necessary to get the people to obey the law from the heart and not just pay superficial or lip service to it (3:10; 12:2). Deut 30:1-6; Ezek 11:17-20; 36:24-28 speak of these radical changes. The Lord will remove the “foreskin” of their heart and give them a circumcised heart, or take away their “stony” heart and give them a new heart. With this heart they will be able to obey his laws, statutes, ordinances, and commands (Deut 30:8; Ezek 11:20; 36:27). The new covenant does not entail a new law; it is the same law that Jeremiah has repeatedly accused them of rejecting or ignoring (6:19; 9:13; 16:11; 26:4; 44:10). What does change is their inner commitment to keep it. Jeremiah has already referred to this in Jer 24:7 and will refer to it again in Jer 32:39.

15 sn Compare Jer 24:7; 30:22; 31:1 and see the study note on 30:2.

16 tn The presence of the independent pronoun in the Hebrew text is intended to contrast their actions with those of their ancestors.

17 sn This refers to the temple. See Jer 7:10, 11, 14, 30 and see the translator’s note on 7:10 and the study note on 10:25 for the explanation of the idiom involved here.



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